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Chariot May 2007 - Norm Wakefield

    Equipping Men and Rising to the Call audio sets are on sale for only $10. All DVD sets are 25-30% on sale on our website now. You can find them here

The Affirmation of Daughters - Part 4  

    My daughters are 31, 29, and 23 now. Abby and Alyssa are married with children, and Amanda still lives with us. One of the lessons of these last few years has been the realization that my affirmation of godly womanhood is still necessary and desired. I'm not sure why, but I thought when my daughters got married, my job as a father was completed. Even as I write that last sentence, it sounds incredulous that I would think such a thing, but I did.

    The privilege of affirming godly womanhood in daughters never ends. Things I thought were settled in their hearts before they left home have needed reaffirmation as they face the spiritual battles of adulthood. Perhaps now, more than ever, they still need my love, acceptance, and affirmation. Life is considerably more complicated for them (and me) than when they were under my roof, and I must walk a fine line between continuing to affirm them without rejecting them or appearing to them as if I want to control their lives when I see things about their lives that I think are hindering their witness or my testimony as a father. My relationship with my daughters has never been better and continues to deepen. When they married, I relinquished all jurisdictional responsibilities to their husbands as God's Word directs. Recognizing I no longer have authority to tell my daughters how they should live (unless they ask my opinion) has deepened my prayer life and provided more opportunities to trust God than when they were at home.

    The previous five suggestions for affirming godly womanhood in daughters are in the Chariot of Fire articles at www.spiritofelijah/chariot.
            
�      Giving a daily expression of non-sexual affection.
�      Providing a rich example of servanthood and protection.
�      Encouraging them to accept the way God designed them.
�      Model personal relationship with God through Jesus Christ.
�      Redeem your faults, weaknesses, and mistakes.

    Hopefully you've made application and are taking steps to implement these suggestions. The next suggestion for affirming godly womanhood in daughters begins at their new birth in Christ and may be continued throughout their lives. Because of its great importance, I'm dedicating this entire article to this vital ministry to daughters.            
 
Lead them to find their identity and security in their relationship with God through Jesus Christ

    Ever since my daughters were born again by God's Spirit, I sought to follow John the Baptist's example. He said, "He (Jesus) must increase and I must decrease." By the Holy Spirit's guidance, I have led them to seek their heavenly Father's approval more than mine, lest I encourage a spirit of idolatry in them toward me. When they are young and a relationship with Christ hasn't begun, fathers must play a more active role in guiding and disciplining a daughter. However, the goal with a young daughter is still the same as for an older daughter: lead them to draw near to Christ and relate to Him as Lord of life. Fathers are merely the forerunners for Christ.  
 
Are you passively allowing another man to be "god"?

    Fathers can err on two sides when it comes to their responsibilities to affirm womanhood for their daughters. On one hand they can be passive and uninvolved in the lives of their daughters. Many fathers leave their daughters to their wives, expecting their daughters to find their identity as women from their mothers. When a fathers don't know what to do, are too busy pursuing a career, or are afraid of failure or rejection with regard to fathering a daughter, they usually leave the definition of womanhood to the young men who want to use their daughters.

    Daughters are designed to look to a father for affirmation of womanhood. But when fathers aren't there or are uninterested, the most interested boy will suffice. If daughters are tempted to idolize their dads, the temptation to idolize another man who gives them attention may be overwhelming. God only knows how many fathers have abdicated their God-given responsibility to affirm their daughters. In so doing, those fathers allow another man to become "god" to their daughters. Will they encourage the girls they want to use for their selfish desires to seek their identity and security in a relationship with God in Christ? The chances are slim to nil.

    What's a mother to do when her husband is absent or passive? As her husband's helpmeet, she points her daughter to find her identity in Christ rather than in men. From her own life example she can testify to the security that a woman finds in her relationship with God in Christ. In leading her daughter to her heavenly Father, God may reveal Himself to her in a powerful way connecting her to Himself and providing what she so desperately needs from a father.

    Father, have you fallen into the passive ditch? I encourage you to show your love and devotion to Christ by leading your daughter to find her identity and security in a relationship with God in Jesus Christ. You do this by example as you demonstrate your daily devotion, love for God's Word, and humility as you walk in submission to the Holy Spirit. Additionally, you teach her to do the same each day as she copes with life's circumstances and relationships. Share this vision with her and point her to Christ. But beware of falling into another ditch.
 
Are you setting yourself up as "god"?

    The second way a father may err in affirming womanhood for his daughter is by leading her to find her identity and security in having a good reputation based on living by standards. I've seen many fall headlong in to this ditch and take their entire family with them! You'll notice my approach to affirming womanhood is not one of a set of rules or guidelines for your daughters to perform. One of the major parenting mistakes I've observed is this: fathers attempting to get their daughters (or sons) to live by "godly standards". Not that standards of behavior and character are not important, but apart from relationship with Christ, they generally lead to pharisaism and pride. Additionally, without realizing it, fathers may communicate rejection of their daughter's personhood and personality and set themselves up as "god" in their lives.

    When a daughter feels she is only acceptable and lovable to her father when she lives by his guidelines�regardless of how right those guidelines are�instead of feeling loved, she feels controlled and rejected. Once a daughter has been born again by God's Spirit a father should teach her about the Holy Spirit's lordship. If he continues to place himself as "lord", she may feel manipulated and controlled by her father. If the only time she gets her father's approval is when she allows him to control her life, she will experience a deep internal conflict.

    Let me explain why I say these things. The Holy Spirit must be Lord of her life if there is to be internal freedom. Think about what the apostle Paul wrote to the Corinthians.
 
Where the Spirit is Lord, there is liberty 

    Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty. But we all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, just as from the Lord, the Spirit (2 Corinthians 3:17-18 NASB).

    With all due respect for the translators of the NASB and acknowledging that what is said in verse 17 is true, I would like to suggest another rendering of verse 17.  "Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit is Lord, there is liberty." The reason I think this is what Paul had in mind is that the context supports it, maybe even demands it. Notice he begins by stating the Lord is the Spirit, and then again in verse 18 says the Spirit and the Lord are one in the same. Paul was contrasting Jews who live by the Law and those who turn to the Lord. Once a person turns to the Lord, the Spirit isn't only present ("where the Spirit of the Lord is"); the Holy Spirit is the Lord. Paul's point is this: when a person lives under the lordship of the Holy Spirit, internal liberty and transformation occur.

    We want this experience for our children, don't we? Do we really want them living by our guidelines once they come to Christ? Unknowingly, I think many fathers and daughters get caught in the devil's scheme of destruction through a spirit of idolatry, control, and rejection. Let me illustrate what I mean by using a fictional father and daughter relationship.
 
Life example 

    Tom loves his seventeen-year-old daughter, Cara, greatly and wishes for her to be a testimony of purity, modesty, and submission. His goal for his daughter to practice all the qualities listed in Titus 2 for young women is commendable. Tom sincerely has good intentions toward Cara and would say he desires and prays for God to make him a blessing to her. However, without realizing what he is doing or the powerful effect he has on his daughter, Tom expresses displeasure, withholds affection or notice, and criticizes Cara anytime she doesn't display those standards. At times knowingly or unknowingly, he rewards her when she pleases him and expresses rejection when she doesn't.

    For years, Cara has been controlled by her father's rejection and approval. The sense of shame and fear she experiences is deep and destructive. Her father tells her that if she really honors him, she will obey him, dress the way he wants, fix her hair the way he likes it, go where he wants her to go, and do what he desires each day. In most, if not all of the areas of her life, Cara would say her dad holds the keys of control.

    What worked when she was a little girl became destructive once she turned to the Lord. Because she was used to complying with whatever her father said, she didn't need to listen to the Holy Spirit, become sensitive to His pleasure and displeasure, and find her identity and security in Christ. Her father's lordship controlled her life. Although Tom said he wanted her to follow Jesus, his relationship with her communicated another message: To obey and think like he did is the same as obeying and thinking like Jesus. If all there is to life is following a set of standards and having a good outward appearance and reputation, then Tom's idea of honor might have some merit, but that's not life. Satan's scheme is antichrist, with anti meaning in the place of Christ. Without realizing it, Tom places himself in Jesus' place when he demands conformity to his standards.
 
Watch out for Satan's scheme 

    Do you see the scheme of the evil one in this relationship? Although it is right for Tom to teach Cara honor and obedience to parents, what happens if Cara has different thoughts than her father on an issue? What if Cara's immaturity blinds her to the wisdom of a particular decision? If Tom shames or rejects Cara for their differences and doesn't lead her to the Holy Spirit as Lord in her life, he sets himself up as "lord" instead. Then Cara doesn't experience freedom when she thinks about doing what her father wishes. Deep inside she knows the Holy Spirit is pleased if she obeys her father (because the Bible tells her to do so in Ephesians 4). She may even suspect her father to be right on an issue, however, she wonders why she doesn't feel freedom and joy in complying.

    Furthermore, Cara feels rejected, ashamed, and fearful she isn't unconditionally loved by her father. Once these thoughts find a home in Cara, she begins to look for signs that her father indeed rejects her, is ashamed of her, and doesn't love her. She may unwittingly test him by resisting him or expressing different thoughts on a subject than her father. If Tom fails to realize the issue isn't his own reputation and self-worth as a father derived from his daughter treating him as "lord", he may provide Cara plenty of proof that her suspicions are well founded. She eventually concludes her father is more concerned about his reputation and standards than he is about her as a person. Her heart is deeply hurt by the hypocrisy and lack of love she so desperately needs and longs for from her father.

    The devil's scheme is working: Cara treasures her father's approval more than God's approval. He becomes her idol, having the power to control her life by granting or denying approval. She becomes his idol in that his happiness, reputation, and self-approval as a father are derived from her granting or denying conformity to his thoughts and standards. The noose tightens around the neck of the relationship�choking off the flow of love.
 
What is God doing?         

    Why does God allow the devil to destroy like this? I believe it is for their good and sanctification. Consider why I believe this to be so. The love principle is this: love cannot flow where idolatry exists because love only comes from and through God, the Holy Spirit. Where He is Lord, love freely flows (Read my book Equipped to Love for more insight into this principle). What if God sees the spirit of idolatry in Tom and Cara? If they are His, He must expose it, cleanse it, and liberate them. Blindness on an issue in either Tom or Cara exposes the idolatrous scheme and the destruction of the evil one in their relationship.

    Sometimes differences are necessary for love to be demonstrated. Paul wrote the Corinthians, "I hear that divisions exist among you; and in part I believe it. For there must also be factions among you, so that those who are approved may become evident among you" (1 Corinthians 11:18-19). Paul's point is this: the ones who have been approved by God will love through the differences and factions. Why? Because they find their approval in God, not in others. In Tom and Cara's case, love will not flow until both repent and turn back to the Lord, the Spirit! From God's point of view then, a conflict or difference may be necessary so real love may be experienced between them.

    It is rare for someone to realize the hand of God in conflict. Usually father and daughter go toe-to-toe, accusations fly, shame and fear envelope the relationship, and they reach an impasse. All it takes is one party refusing to humble themselves and demanding to control the situation to keep the relationship in a tailspin into the mire of irreconcilable differences.

    The father feels he's losing control of his daughter (and his reputation) as she displays attitudes or actions contrary to his own. Most fathers in such cases increase the control by adding more laws and threats. The temptation to manipulate becomes overwhelming. How right it seems to carve with one of these tools.
 
�      "You're not honoring and respecting me like God commands." (Shame)
�      "I really love you and want the very best for you."  (Guilt)
�      "If you'll obey me in this, I'll give you�" (Bribery)
�      "If you don't stop doing ______ (fill in the blank), I'm going to lose my reputation." (Guilt and shame)
�      "If you don't agree with me, you are being rebellious." (Guilt)
�      "Where did I go wrong with you?" (Shame)
�      Can you add some others to this list?

     How does a daughter react to the efforts of the father to regain control? The daughter feels she's losing control of something holy, her personhood and identity. She perhaps feels an intense conflict: on one hand if she complies merely out of obedience, she feels controlled like a puppet; and on the other hand if she doesn't comply, the guilt and shame smother her soul. It's a lose-lose situation.

    As these dynamics continue, the hopelessness each feels about the relationship and reconciliation builds. Father and daughter drift apart as distrust, disappointment, unforgiveness, and bitterness find a nest in their souls. Usually a time comes when the daughter can't take the conflict any longer, refuses to talk, and/or leaves the home at the earliest opportunity. Every attempt to resolve the relationship ends in further catastrophe because one of the two, if not both, demand to be "lord".
 
There is hope!

    If Tom released Cara to the Lord and led her to Him for guidance, the dynamics would be totally different. She may for a time adopt a standard different from her father on a particular issue and he have to suffer some embarrassment, slander, and rejection from his peers. However, if he humbly submits himself to Jesus as Lord of his life, seeks to find his identity and security in Christ, and encourages Cara to follow the Holy Spirit, she will experience the love of God through him.

    This doesn't mean he can't speak truth to his daughter. He can and he must, but the purpose of doing so is to encourage her to relate primarily to the Lord, not to him. In this way, Cara learns that the heavenly Father's love is unconditional and is patient. As Tom loves and accepts Cara through their differences with an undeniable trust in God with his own reputation and a faith in God to do the work in Cara, she learns about herself, the Holy Spirit, and the Father's love.
 
What about married daughters?

     Although my life example involves a daughter living at home, I opened this article talking about my relationship with my married daughters. I've discovered I still have the power to bless my married daughters by the way I relate to them and encourage them in their relationship with the Holy Spirit. It's so easy to make them feel obligated to me rather than encouraging them to please the Lord and their husbands. This is especially true if they have adopted certain views or practices different from when they were in my home. If a father isn't careful he may place a wedge between his daughter and her husband or between he and his daughter.

    When a father intrudes into the affairs of his married daughter to get her to seek his approval, he makes his daughter choose between him and her husband. No daughter wants to be put in this position. Again, it is a lose-lose situation for her. She desperately wants the acceptance of both her father and her husband. But forced to choose between the two, in most cases her husband will get the nod��and he should! The more the father makes his opinions and desires known, the more he damages the relationship.

    What have I done when my married daughters (and their husbands) do things with which I disagree or prefer they wouldn't do? I've chosen to continue to lead them to find their identity and security in their relationship with God in Christ rather than try to get them to conform to my preferences or standards. Making them accountable to me interferes with both the Holy Spirit and their husband's place in their lives.

    I want to be clear about something: the Scriptures give no authority to fathers over their married daughters (or sons). They are to leave and cleave to each other, and we as parents should continue our ministry of leading them to find their new married identity in their relationship with Jesus Christ. Even Jesus reproved his mother when she put pressure on him to do something at the wedding in Cana. Mary was out of line with her adult son, and he told her so. His allegiance was to His Father and not to her. She had put Jesus into the position of having to choose between his mother and His heavenly Father. When we have differences with our married daughters, we set them aside, trust them to our heavenly Father, and encourage them to follow the Holy Spirit as best they know.
 
Can you relate to Tom and Cara?

    Here's what I've said: when you lead your daughter to find her identity and security in her relationship with God through Jesus Christ, you are leading her to the Holy Spirit as Lord. You are also demonstrating that you trust the Lord with your own reputation and life. You can love your daughter, speak the truth to her, and not control her life. Desiring the Holy Spirit's lordship in your daughter's life should be your highest goal for her. All the issues of life flow from her relationship with God. Love cannot flow in your relationship unless your relationship is idolatry-free.

    I don't know a father and daughter who can't relate to Tom and Cara. Dealing with the spirit of idolatry and control are common temptations for us all. Here are some questions you might ask yourself. Are you leading your daughter (your wife or son also) to turn to the Lord, the Holy Spirit, instead of yourself? Have you demanded that you be "lord" of her life? If you're not sure, I encourage you to ask her. Perhaps you can read this article together and invite her honest response.

    I close this article with these additional suggestions for application. May God guide you by His Spirit as you affirm your wife and daughter in Christ.
 
�      Ask you daughter about the dynamics of shame, guilt, and fear in your relationship. Learn what communicates them. If these dynamics exist, confess, ask forgiveness, and seek reconciliation.
�      If you have been more concerned about your reputation than loving and accepting your daughter in your differences, then confess it as sin for not trusting God and affirm your love and acceptance.
�      Have an official event releasing your daughter to God. Ask the Holy Spirit to guide you in what to say and do to communicate that you trust God's power and her to seek God in all things.
�      Make a list of the differences between you and your daughter that God is using to train you to look to Him, trust Him, and repent of idolatry.

Would you like to be on the Elijah Ministries Prayer Team?

    The backbone of Elijah Ministries is the prayer team who pray diligently for God to turn the hearts of men to Himself, their wives, and their children. Before I leave to speak, I send out a prayer team invitation to those who will intercede for God to work for His glory in us as a team for the Kingdom. Not only is it a blessing to those whom I speak and myself; but it is also a reminder to the team about the direction of their own hearts. If you would like to enter into the labor together with me, you may go to my website and click on "Prayer Team".

    If you haven't visited our website, www.spiritofelijah.com, please stop by sometime. You'll find:

*   Resources to equip you and your family

*   Previous Chariot articles

*   Norm's speaking schedule

*   Free MP3 downloads  

*   Various pages translated and available in Spanish  

*   An online store to purchase resources and make tax-free contributions by credit card  

 

 

The article above is a part of the Equipping Men series. The series is available on both audio cassette, CD, VHS and DVD. This and other resources, including all past issues of the Chariot, are available at http://www.spiritofelijah.com.

 

I invite you to be a part of the moving of the Spirit of Elijah in your church, community, and the world. How?

1.  Send this article to other men or families that you know would benefit from it. You might inform them of the previous articles available on-line at our website.

2.  Share resources from the Spirit of Elijah Ministries with others. If Equipping Men or Rising to the Call have been a blessing to you, then you know it will be beneficial to others. Either share your resources, tell them about the resources, or purchase a set or two as an investment in their lives.

3.  Share with others what you have learned and put into practice in turning your heart to God, your wife, and your children. If God has done this in you, then He wants to affect others through you.

4.  Join the Elijah Ministries email prayer team and make intercession for others that their hearts would be turned in revival to the Lord, their wives, and their children. This can be done on-line at www.spiritofelijah.com.  

 

            Norm Wakefield
            Elijah Ministries
            P.O. Box 377
            Bulverde, Texas 78163
            830.980.5606
            info@spiritofelijah.com
           
http://www.spiritofelijah.com

05.07

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